Nanotube Molecular Wires as Chemical Sensors

Jing Kong(Stanford University), Nathan R. Franklin(Stanford University), Chongwu Zhou(Stanford University), Michael G. Chapline(Stanford University), Shu Peng(Stanford University), Kyeongjae Cho(Stanford University), Hongjie Dai(Stanford University)
Science
January 28, 2000
Cited by 6,019

Abstract

Chemical sensors based on individual single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) are demonstrated. Upon exposure to gaseous molecules such as NO(2) or NH(3), the electrical resistance of a semiconducting SWNT is found to dramatically increase or decrease. This serves as the basis for nanotube molecular sensors. The nanotube sensors exhibit a fast response and a substantially higher sensitivity than that of existing solid-state sensors at room temperature. Sensor reversibility is achieved by slow recovery under ambient conditions or by heating to high temperatures. The interactions between molecular species and SWNTs and the mechanisms of molecular sensing with nanotube molecular wires are investigated.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis